No timeframe on bid to lift wreck of plane carrying Emiliano Sala

Geo Ocean III specialist search vessel off the coast of Alderney in the English Channel, near the site where the wreckage of the plane which crashed with Cardiff footballer Emiliano Sala on board was found. Picture: Jon Le Ray/PA Wire.

Tuesday, February 05, 2019 - 01:37 PM

A timeframe has yet to be set to lift the wreck of the plane carrying Cardiff City player Emiliano Sala and pilot David Ibbotson, investigators have said.

The Piper Malibu N264DB carrying Sala, 28, and Mr Ibbotson, 59, was discovered off the coast of Alderney in the English Channel on Sunday evening - almost two weeks after it disappeared.

The Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB) confirmed on Monday that a body is visible in the wreck, which is about 67m deep.

James Hotson, a spokesman for the AAIB, said on Tuesday that analysis of the plane in is still ongoing.

He told the Press Association: "We are currently working underwater when conditions allow the remotely operated vehicle (ROV) to go down."

The movements of tides and currents sometimes interrupted the work of the ROV, he said.

He added: "We can't give an indication at the moment of when [the plane] will be raised and we haven't given an indication at the moment that we are going to raise it."

Mr Hotson said there was always a possibility that the wreck would not be raised and that a decision would be made on the advice of salvage experts.

"At the moment we are still conducting research - all I can say is that an announcement will be made when we are able to," he said.

Mr Hotson said that, if lifted, the wreckage would most likely be taken to an English port before being transferred to the AAIB's laboratory in Farnborough, east Hampshire.

Picture: Jon Le Ray/PA Wire.

On Monday, marine scientist David Mearns, who co-ordinated the discovery of the plane, said it was "imperative" the aircraft was lifted to provide answers to the victims' families.

He added: "The AAIB should be able to rule things out or rule things in, that's the normal investigative process for any crash, so I think it's imperative that the plane is recovered, and now even more so now we know someone is down there."

Mr Mearns, who has spearheaded around 20 historic wreck discoveries including one of Britain's most famous battleships the HMS Hood, offered his services to the Sala family for free and has been in constant contact with them.